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Cook, Arthur B.
Zeus: a study in ancient religion (Band 3,1): Zeus god of the dark sky (earthquake, clouds, wind, dew, rain, meteorits): Text and notes — Cambridge, 1940

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https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.14698#0913

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818 The owl of Athena

Monn. gr. rom. ii. :. 1319 ff. pi. 62, 10—14, 3- 847 ft*, pis. 241, 8—21, 242, 1 — '9'
243> 1—23, Brit. Mus. Cat. Coins Crete etc. p. 103 ff. pi. 23, 16 ff., ib. Lycia etc
p. Ixxxi. Supra i. 305 n. 14). An archaic Greek bronze in the British Museum shows
a goddess assumed to be Aphrodite holding a pomegranate in her right hand, her drapery
in her left {Brit. Mus. Cat. Bronzes p. 18 no. 198 pi. 3). An Etruscan mirror-stand in
the same collection repeats the motif (ib. p. 77 no. 549). Terra-cotta statuettes fro©
Kition (Larnaka) in Kypros, which represent a goddess holding a pomegranate to her
breast (Brit. Mus. Cat. Terracottas p. 47 nos. A 270, A 271, p. 59 no. A 391) or on her
knee (ib. p. 47 no. A 269), may be meant for Aphrodite (see ib. p. xxxvii, and cp. sup'a
ii. 807 n. 5 (4)). One of the Horai on the magnificent red-figured kylix by the potter
Sosias (bibliography supra ii. 1167 n. 6: add J. D. Beazley Attische Vasenmahr des
rotfigurigen Stils Tubingen 1925 p. 59) is holding a branch laden with pomegranates in
either hand. An oval bronze tablet of Graeco-Roman date in the British Museum l'aS

Fig. 624.

a high relief of three goddesses (Horai?), each of whom wears a triple-pointed cl°'jr
with an inverted crescent in front of it and holds a pomegranate in her right hand:
left hands hold respectively a bird, a flower, and an indistinguishable object (Brit- 1
Cat. Bronzes p. 156 no. 862. My fig. 624 is from a new photograph). How 1
(O. Hofer in Roscher Lex. Myth. iv. 121 ff., Weicker in Pauly—Wissowa Real' ^
i A. 1004 ff.) and the Rhoiai (O. Hofer loc. cit. iv. 119), nymphs of the pomegranate-
were represented, we do not know.

Older than any of these is a clay idol (o-8om high) found in a small circular hut 0
latest ' Minoan ' phase at Gazi between Tylissos and Herakleion. The half-length "» ^,
of a goddess with uplifted hands rises from a cylindrical base (cp. supra ii. 536 nS' 4° 'wit
she wears, stuck upright in her hair, three pins topped by pomegranates. A simi'ar' gf
smaller (o-53m high), goddess from the same sanctuary has on her head 0 jt-(/h
consecration' flanked by a pair of doves (Elizabeth P. Blegen in the Am. Jouffl-
1936 xl. 371 f. figs. 1, 2 ( = my fig. 625), 3). lf into

A modern Greek folk-tale from Syros (Syra) makes a prince transform ^'1Tlse/j^1 "
a huge pomegranate growing on a tree in the king's garden (J. G. von Halm Gff
und albanesische Marchen Leipzig 1864 3& no. 68).
 
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